Processing and Cognitive Enhancement (PACE) was developed by Dr Ken Gibson,
specialist in pediatric visual processing, and his brother, Keith Gibson, PhD, clinical
psychologist, after they observed that some patients seemed to focus better and recall important
facts more easily after short but intense periods of training.

People enroll in the PACE program in order to:

Sharpen skills to reach career or educational goals

Restore skills diminished by normal aging

Aid in recovery from dyslexia and ADD

Address problems areas that are impediments to success

Improve skills for personal satisfaction and self-esteem

Recover functions lost as a result of illness or impairment

The developers created a series of exercises designed to rapidly improve concentration
and recall abilities. After ten years of review and development, results showed that students
were being helped who had attention deficit disorder (ADD), dyslexia, memory deficits and
other learning disabilities. PACE appeared to improve the brain's overall processing ability,
doing for mental abilities what exercise does for the body.